Effective description of a suspended mirror coupled to cavity light -Limitations of Q-enhancement due to normal mode splitting by an optical spring-
Yuuki Sugiyama, Tomoya Shichijo, Nobuyuki Matsumoto, Akira Matsumura,, Daisuke Miki, and Kazuhiro Yamamoto

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how an optical spring affects the quality factor of a suspended mirror system, revealing limitations due to normal-mode splitting and providing insights for maintaining low dissipation in quantum experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the impact of optical springs on the Q-factor of suspended mirrors, considering rotational modes, and matches experimental results.
Findings
Reduction factor of Q-factor is approximately 4.38.
Normal-mode splitting limits Q-enhancement in optical spring systems.
High dissipation can be mitigated with proper beam parameters.
Abstract
Pendulums have long been used as force sensors due to their ultimately low dissipation (high-quality factor) characteristic. They are widely used in the measurement of the gravitational constant, detection of gravitational waves, and determination of ultralight dark matter. Furthermore, it is expected that the quantum nature of gravity will be demonstrated by performing quantum control for macroscopic pendulums. Recently, we have demonstrated that quantum entanglement between two pendulums can be generated using an optical spring [D. Miki, N. Matsumoto, A. Matsumura, T. Shichijo, Y. Sugiyama, K. Yamamoto, and N. Yamamoto, arXiv:2210.13169 (2022)]; however, we have ignored that an optical spring can reduce the quality factor (Q-factor) by applying normal-mode splitting between the pendulum and rotational modes possessing relatively high dissipation. Herein, we analyze a system composed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Advanced Fiber Optic Sensors · Photonic and Optical Devices
